130 Send us $5,000 and we'll send $50 back* *(a month) The New York Bank for Savings would love to mail you a regular check in any amount you decide. All you have to do is send us some money watch it accumulate high divi- dends, and tell us how often and how much to mail We call th is interesting plan an Auto- matic Payout Plan. You'll call it con- venient if you have someone in mind you'd like to provide for: parents, grand- children, a child's allowance, newlyweds. And they will call you a Guardian Angel. It's easy. Start with a lump sum up to $25,000 or a smaller amount and add to it regularly. If you deposit $5,000 you can provide $50 monthly for ten years - big interest dividends are Included. t You'll always have the option of chang- ing the amount of the payments. And, if you decide you want to be your own rich uncle, you can use the Plan for your own retirement income. Your money will be safe and always available. Our latest dividend 5% a year straight rate on all accounts of $1 or more from DAY of deposit. Dividends com- pounded 4 times a year. Begin bestowing right now; mail the coupon below. tbased on current rate compounded quarterly. I nterest-dividend rates are not guaranteed in advance. Rates vary in accordance with bank earnmgs -----------------, THE NEW YORK BANK FOR SAVINGS 2-18 Park Ave. So. at 22nd St., N. Y. 10010 D Please open an Automatic Payout Ac- count as specified. Enclosed for deposit is $ My Name Address City State Zip THE NEW YORK BANK FOR SAVINGS NEW YORK'S OLDEST SAVINGS BANK Assets over $1.7 billion L________________ MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION ments, when they changed his clothes at the funeral parlor. Of course some people say that this was get-out-of- town money Hogo had given him, but I don't believe that. I choose to be- lieve that Hogo placed a great deal of trust in Paul, more trust perhaps than the hest judgment would suggest, strictly speaking. But I m talkIng like a banker now, in a shrill and judicious way, and I don't want to talk like that. Consider Amelia, who is sitting here in the front row with a black cloth over her face, waiting to see her late lover tucked away under the earth, in the hox that has been prepared for him. Imagine one's feelings at such a mo- ment. No, it is too difficult. I shall not ask you to imagine them. I only ask that you empathi7e with this poor woman, who has been deprived, at a stroke of the Lord's pen as it wel e, of a source of income and warmth and human intercourse, which we all regard so highly, and need so much. I leave that thought to stick in your minds. As for myself, I am only Fred, a former bandleader spitted on a passion for Snow White, that girl in the third row there, seated next to Jane. She will not even speak to me, even though I am in her power. It seems that heing in someone's power implies no obligation on the part of the one In whose power one is, not even the obligation of spar- ing one a word now and then, or a yellow half smile. But that is my busi- . ness, and not the business we are gath- ered together here in the sight of God to execute, which is the hurnIng of Paul, and the putting of him into a vase, and the sinking of the vase into the ground, in the box that has been prepared for it. Some people like to be scattered on top, but Paul wanted to be put under the ground. That accords with what else we knew about him." . ANATHEMATIZATION OF THE WORLD IS NOT AN ADEQUATE RESPONSE TO THE WORLD. . Trying to break out of this bag that we are in. What gave us the idea that there was something hetter? How does the concept, "something better," arise What does it look like, this sOJ'nething better? Don't tell me that it is an infant's idea because I refuse to believe that. I know some sentient in- fants but they are not that sentient. And then the great horde of persons FEßRVARY I 8, I 9 (, 7 , .. '< ì ...., '.:::: ?o. <::'" .,../A. . , ."" . , M;. *' i< ">%: ì .. . . ', .. il=N'A.'::, .:$' " . æ:;:'.:' ".<"" t ",,: Þ' r : % -.::.-:::., :-;:::::::. : :.,... , / I' "In Bermuda, I always stay at the Inverurie. · ." ø (ow. fS :N' :" ,:i:.. "'"<< .....:.... , ...' . >>-: HWhy? [t's friendly, intimate, lively-like Berrnuda herself. There's swimming, sail- ing; tennis and golf; cycling. It's social, too. Dancing, star entertainment, swizzle parties. Inspired cuisine, impeccable serv- ice. Comfortable, balcony rooms. It's Bermuda's greatest resort hotel, or my name's not Connie Engelhardt!" (Manager and part owner of the Inverurie) See your travel agent or Wm. P. Wolfe Org, 500 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10036. Telephone LO 5-1114. INVERURIE The Hotel at the Water's Edge PAGET · BERMUDA Îr , i ) t } ,-'f'....." ROOM iewel of a restaurant in a most unusual setting Easily New York's most unique restaurant, 42nd Street overlooking the Hudson River in the Sheraton Motor Inn Motorists take West Side Highway south to the46th St. Exit. FREE INDOOR PARKING. Reservations suggested: OX 5-6500. e JULES PODELL PRESENTS CONNIE FRANCIS With Joe Mazzu Musical Director PAT COOPER C PAC BANA FULL COURSE DINNERS SERVED 6:30 P.M.-9:30 P.M. 2 SHOWS NIGHTLY 8 & 12 3 SHOWS SATS. 8, 11 & 2 10 E. 60 · PL 8-0900 e